High-resolution atmospheric emission inventory of the argentine energy sector. Comparison with edgar global emission database

Enrique Puliafito, S.; Allende, David G.; Castesana, Paula S.; Ruggeri, Maria F.

Abstract

This study presents a 2014 high-resolution spatially disaggregated emission inventory (0.025 degrees x 0.025 degrees horizontal resolution), of the main activities in the energy sector in Argentina. The sub-sectors considered are public generation of electricity, oil refineries, cement production, transport (maritime, air, rail and road), residential and commercial. The following pollutants were included: greenhouse gases (CO2, CH4, N2O), ozone precursors (CO, NOx, VOC) and other specific air quality indicators such as SO2, PM10, and PM2.5. This work could contribute to a better geographical allocation of the pollutant sources through census based population maps. Considering the sources of greenhouse gas emissions, the total amount is 144 Tg CO2eq, from which the transportation sector emits 57.8 Tg (40%); followed by electricity generation, with 40.9 Tg (28%); residential + commercial, with 31.24 Tg (22%); and cement and refinery production, with 14.3 Tg (10%). This inventory shows that 49% of the total emissions occur in rural areas: 31% in rural areas of medium population density, 13% in intermediate urban areas and 7% in densely populated urban areas. However, if emissions are analyzed by extension (per square km), the largest impact is observed in medium and densely populated urban areas, reaching more than 20.3 Gg per square km of greenhouse gases, 297 Mg/km(2) of ozone precursors gases and 11.5 Mg/km(2) of other air quality emissions. A comparison with the EDGAR global emission database shows that, although the total country emissions are similar for several sub sectors and pollutants, its spatial distribution is not applicable to Argentina. The road and residential transport emissions represented by EDGAR result in an overestimation of emissions in rural areas and an underestimation in urban areas, especially in more densely populated areas. EDGAR underestimates 60 Gg of methane emissions from road transport sector and fugitive emissions from refining activities.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000432029400005 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: HELIYON
Volumen: 3
Número: 12
Editorial: Cell Press
Fecha de publicación: 2017
DOI:

10.1016/j.heliyon.2017.e00489

Notas: ISI